What is Project 2025 and how is it connected to Trump?
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[July 13, 2024]
By Gram Slattery
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A set of conservative policy proposals known as
Project 2025 has become a lightning rod for opponents of Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump as they seek to highlight what they
say are the dangers of him retaking the White House.
Trump has recently tried to distance himself from Project 2025, even
though many of his closest policy advisers are deeply involved. The
campaign of Democratic President Joe Biden says the project is proof
that Trump would adopt a series of authoritarian and hard-right policies
if elected.
WHAT IS PROJECT 2025?
At its heart, Project 2025 is a series of detailed policy proposals put
together by hundreds of high-profile conservatives that the project's
participants hope Trump adopts if elected. Those proposals are laid out
in a roughly 900-page book.
Participants in the project are also assembling lists of thousands of
conservatives that could be slotted into politically appointed positions
throughout the government in the opening days of a Trump administration.
Behind the scenes, the project's affiliates are drafting executive
orders and agency regulations that could be used to quickly implement
the policies that the project is advocating once Trump takes office.
IS IT CONNECTED TO THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN?
Yes and no.
The project, a collaboration of dozens of conservative organizations, is
overseen by the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing think tank. The group
is independent of the Trump campaign, a fact Project 2025 and Trump
himself have emphasized.
"I know nothing about Project 2025," Trump said on social media in early
July.
But that's not the whole story.
In practice, many of Trump's closest policy advisers and those likely to
take high-ranking positions in his administration are heavily involved
in the project.
For instance, former Trump administration official Russ Vought has
played a major role in Project 2025. He also serves as the policy
director of the Republican National Convention's platform committee, an
appointment the campaign signed off on.
WHAT ARE THE PROJECT'S MAIN PROPOSALS?
Project 2025's policy suggestions range in topic from foreign affairs to
education.
Among other things, Project 2025 proposes enforcing laws that make it
illegal to mail abortion pills over state lines, criminalizing
pornography and eliminating the Department of Education.
The project also advocates a sweeping elimination of environmental
regulations and a crackdown on programs to boost diversity in the
workplace, which the project argues are broadly illegal.
The project also calls for a broad expansion in presidential power by
boosting the number of political appointees and increasing the
president's authority over the Justice Department. That last proposal
has spooked many law enforcement officials, who say it will undermine
the department's ability to conduct investigations without political
interference.
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The U.S. Capitol building is pictured on Capitol Hill in Washington,
U.S., April 23, 2024. REUTERS/Julia Nikhinson//File Photo
DOES TRUMP AGREE WITH THE PROJECT'S PROPOSALS?
Trump appears to agree with many - but not all - proposals.
In practice, his campaign has a small in-house policy team, and he
tends to discuss policy only in broad terms on the trail.
Though he has endorsed various proposals that are central to Project
2025, like giving himself the power to radically expand the number
of political appointees in government and eliminating the Department
of Education, he disagrees with other proposals, like putting
restrictions on abortion pills.
WHY IS PROJECT 2025 SUCH A BIG DEAL AT THE MOMENT?
Project 2025 has been around in some form since early 2023.
But in recent months, the Biden campaign has made a concerted effort
to raise awareness of Project 2025 among voters and turn the project
into a symbol of the hard-right political shift that it says would
occur in the U.S. should Trump be elected.
Biden said this week that "Project 2025 will destroy America," and
his campaign has created a web page dedicated to the project. The
Democratic National Committee in July announced plans for billboards
mentioning Project 2025 in 10 cities.
A Supreme Court ruling in early July that presidents have broad
immunity from prosecution for actions taken while in office has
heightened concerns among some Trump opponents that the project's
attempts to increase presidential power will be particularly
dangerous.
The Trump campaign, in turn, has expressed increasing annoyance with
the project, repeatedly emphasizing that the project's proposals are
separate from the campaign's official policy platform.
In a statement to Reuters, a campaign official accused the Democrats
of fearmongering and said only the official Republican platform and
a series of proposals from the campaign known as Agenda 47 should be
taken as official.
"Team Biden and the DNC are lying and fearmongering because they
have nothing else to offer the American people," said Danielle
Alvarez, a campaign spokesperson.
(Reporting by Gram Slattery, editing by Ross Colvin and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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